Using legal injunctions, Dov Zakheim’s lawyers forced this website to remove an article we posted with the same title; which tells us he may have something to hide. Seems like others also think so as this video indicates. Watch it while you still can

The brilliant examination of the ‘Holocaust’ by Anthony Lawson has since been censored on the basis of a false Copyright infrigment. But as Lawson explains, this just another attempt to stiffle freedom of expression

Bill Ryan talks to a former City of London insider who participated in a meeting where the elite’s plans for depopulation were discussed. The meeting, which took place in 2005, also discussed a planned financial collapse

The terror outrages in Britain last year may not have been the work of “Muslim extremists”. A series of virtually unreported events in a Birmingham hotel suggest the covert involvement of Britain’s intelligence agencies in orchestrating events

Our web hosts were threatened with legal action after lawyers representing none other than Dov Zakheim himself claimed this article was “defamatory.” Due to an oversight the article was not fully removed so read it before Zakheim gets us shut down

Despite his pledges, Hitler did not implement any serious monetary reform after he came to power. He did make finance completely subservient to the State and, more specifically, rearmament. But he did not nationalize any banks. The Reichsbank was already nationalized by the Weimar Republic. He did not end interest payments to ‘the issuing houses’, who must have made a fortune throughout the war. He did nothing to decouple the Stock Exchange from the economy.

Hjalmar Schacht became Reichsbank President in August 1934. Schacht’s policies allowed full control of the economy to maximize production for war. But it did absolutely nothing to limit massive war profiteering by the financial and industrial classes that brought Hitler to power. Hitler used the monetary system that he inherited from the Weimar Republic. The Reichsmark, like any other banking unit, was lent into circulation.